Bloomberg Takes Aim at Democrats Over Gun Votes

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is upping the ante in his push for stricter gun control, asking the city's top donors to cut off contributions to four Democratic senators who voted against universal background checks in April.

Bloomberg was expected on Wednesday to send personal letters to hundreds of the biggest Democratic donors in New York asking them to stop sending campaign money to the four senators — Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Max Baucus of Montana, Mark Begich of Alaska, and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota — who helped block the background-check bill, reports The New York Times.

Explaining the impetus for his latest move in an interview Wednesday on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," Bloomberg said, "What's surprising is you have an issue that 85 to 90 percent of people in virtually every state, gun owners and non-gun owners, NRA members and non-NRA members, agree on. We don't want to sell guns to people with criminal records or mental problems, and yet Congress doesn't go along."

"It's hard to see how that maintains itself, and in the end you've got to believe the public is going to win this battle," he said.

Bloomberg said he is not limiting his efforts to the Democrats, explaining, "The first thing I've got to do is get it through the Senate… and then you go and sit down with (Rep. John) Boehner and (Rep. Eric) Cantor and the leadership on the Republican side in the House and say, 'Look, if you want your members to get re-elected, they should vote with the public.'

"This is not a partisan thing. This is saving lives," Bloomberg continued. "This is something I feel very strongly about."

Bloomberg also defended his use of pocketbook politics against the Democratic senators.

"Going after these guys and saying, 'Don't give money to them if they don't vote the way you want' is the way a democracy should work. You support the people you agree with and do not support the people you don't agree with," he said. "I'm not the first one to do this. We've always don’t this."